Properties of heart fibroblasts of adult rats in culture |
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Authors: | Maria Zeydel Karen Puglia Mahboubeh Eghbali Jane Fant Sam Seifter Olga O. Blumenfeld |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Biochemistry, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, 1300 Morris Park Avenue, 10461 Bronx, NY, USA;(2) Department of Cell Biology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, 1300 Morris Park Avenue, 10461 Bronx, NY, USA;(3) Cardiovascular Institute, Michael Reese Hospital, University of Chicago, Pritzker School of Medicine, 60616 Chicago, IL, USA |
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Abstract: | Summary In the heart of the adult rat, fibroblasts are mainly responsible for the synthesis and deposition of the collagenous matrix. Because these cells in vitro may serve as an important model system for studies of collagen metabolism in heart tissue, we have cultured and characterized rat-heart fibroblasts from young adult and old animals. Conditions included use of media of different compositions with and without addition of ascorbate. Cell used were either cultured directly from fresh tissues or thawed previously frozen cells. Cultured cells were studied with respect to growth properties, morphology and ultrastructure and patterns of collagen. Heart fibroblasts generally resembled fibroblasts cultured from other tissues, but were more like skeletal muscle fibroblasts in that they deposited, in addition to type I collagen, type IV collagen and laminin. The fibroblasts showed a typical appearance in phase-contrast microscopy and electron microscopy. In the case of cells grown with added ascorbate, aligned collagen fibrils in the extracellular matrix showed a periodicity typical of type I collagen. The deposition of type I collagen occurred only in medium supplemented with ascorbate, and in that circumstance increased as a function of time past confluence; this was independent of the age of the animal from which the cells were obtained or of other changes of medium composition studied. Immunofluorescence studies with specific antibodies revealed that the cells deposited types I and IV collagens, laminin and fibronectin. In contrast to the case of type I collagen, the deposition of type IV collagen occurred in cells grown either with or without ascorbate. Direct observation of type IV collagen is consistent with the previous finding of type IV mRNA in cardiac fibroblasts in situ and in freshly isolated populations of these cells. |
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Keywords: | Cardiac fibroblasts Collagen types I and IV Ascorbate Collagen deposition Aging Rat (Fischer 344) |
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